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Chris Kluwe fired at Edison as a first -time football coach in Fallout by Maga Protest

Days after Chris Kluwe had been tied up with handcuffs and held from a meeting of the city council of Huntington Beach because he dealt with an action by the “peaceful civil disobedience”, he was released from his high school.

The former NFL-Punter and 15-year-old residents of Huntington Beach said that he was released from the Edison High Football program this week, for which he worked as a newcomer football coach for the Chargers.

Kluwe said he was called to a meeting with school officers on Thursday and offered the opportunity to withdraw, and when he did not decide, the door was then shown to him.

“The school released me yesterday,” said Kluwe in a telephone interview on Friday. “The [athletic director] And the deputy director of the supervision brought me in and said that they would get too much attention and they had to let me go.

“Obviously I was amazed because I have the feeling that the community loses a resource. I don't think you will find another ex-NFL player to train Freshman football. “

James Perry, sports director of Huntington Beach Union High School District, said that he could not comment on a “personnel situation” if he was reached on Friday in relation to Kluwe. Rich Boyce, the sports director at Edison, also refused to comment.

At the city council meeting of Huntington Beach on February 18, Kluwe made great comments on the committee and argued that the public would be outrageous.

The library guidelines were at the center of this debate when the management committee achieved a 21-person book review board with a supply supply that has the opportunity to determine which books can find children on the shelves.

A plaque that is reminiscent of the 50th anniversary of the library, which is to be placed in its central branch, pulled sharp counter -reactions from the public to the public that contained a Maga acrostics -formed by the first letters of the words “magical”, “tempting”, “galvanizing” and “adventure”.

Kluwe used the balance of his time at the meeting to take the Maga culture into the crosshairs, and came to the conclusion that it is “deeply corrupt, unmistakably anti-democratic” and that it characterized it as “explicitly a Nazis movement”.

“You may have replaced a swastika with a red hat – that's it,” he told the Council.

Kluwe then announced his intention to protest peacefully, stepped through the podium and went to the podium with his hands behind his back. The police officers immediately immersed him, brought him to the ground and captivated him with handcuffs and then carried him out of the chambers.

During his career as a player, Kluwe made national headlines to work for same -sex marriage. In his hometown, Kluwe sees a landscape in which individuals try to “make their own political profile bigger”.

“What we see from this administration is that they don't care about the American people,” said Kluwe. “They take care of what benefits them personally and Huntington Beach is a microcosm. This city council does not take care of the feedback from the community. … They keep laying the library, even if we have made it very clear that we don't want them to play with the library, and they keep doing things that benefit themselves, like the endless complaints that they keep suing to build living space – which are completely unhappy in court – and the community is like “Why are they waste our money?” …

“Maga does. They don't take care of the community. They may say that they take care of America and fly an American flag, but show their actions that they are against everything that the American dream should stand for, namely that everyone who comes to this country should have a chance to be successful. “